Veronica Hamel is born, in Philadelphia.
She was the model in the last cigarette commercial televised in the U.S. (for Virginia Slims, aired at 11:59 p.m. on New Year's Day 1971 on The Tonight Show). Hamel had been a model in print ads not just for
Slims, but also for Pall
Mall Gold cigarettes.
Hamel started appearing in TV series in 1975. She was
considered for the role of Kelly Garrett on Charlie's Angels, but reportedly declined the role. Producer Aaron Spelling cast Jaclyn Smith instead.
Hamel is probably best remembered for playing Joyce
Davenport, the hard-driving public defender and love interest of police captain
Frank Furillo, on the long-running TV series Hill Street Blues from 1981 to 1987. She was a five-time Emmy nominee
for that role.
Alan Alda's 1988 film A New
Life cast Hamel in a leading role
as his doctor and love interest. She was cast as Elizabeth, the wife of Charles Grodin's character in the movie Taking
Care of Business in 1990. She was
named on Us magazine's "Best Dressed" list for 1983. Hamel portrayed Lily Munster in the 1995 Halloween telefilm Here
Come the Munsters in which Yvonne De Carlo had a cameo.
In 2002, she also appeared on Hill Street Blues creator Steven Bochco's legal drama Philly. In recent
years, Hamel had a recurring role in the NBC television series Third Watch and appeared as Margo Shephard, Jack's
mother, in the ABC series Lost.
November 21
World Television Day
World Television Day celebrates the daily value of
television as a symbol of communication and globalization. Television is one of
the single greatest technological advances of the 20th century, serving to
educate, inform, entertain and influence our decisions and opinions. It is estimated that approximately 90% of
homes around the world have televisions, however, with the introduction of
internet broadcasting, the number is declining in favor of computers.
World Television Day was proclaimed by the United Nations in 1996. It is celebrated annually on November 21.
November 21, 1993
Six days after his final assignment on Blossom, Bill Bixby died of complications in Century City, California.
November 22, 1968
Plato's Stepchildren is a third season episode of the original science fictiontelevision series, Star Trek, first broadcast November 22, 1968.
The Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade is an
annual parade presented by the U.S.-based department store chain Macy's. The tradition started in
1924, tying it for the second-oldest Thanksgiving parade in the United
States with America's Thanksgiving Parade in Detroit (with both parades
being four years younger than the 6abc Dunkin'
Donuts Thanksgiving Day Parade in Philadelphia). The three-hour Macy's event is held in New York City starting
at 9:00 a.m. Eastern Standard Time on Thanksgiving Day, and has been televised nationally on NBC since 1952.
The parade was suspended
from 1942 to 1944 as a result of World War II, owing to
the need for rubber and helium in the war effort. The parade resumed in
1945 using the route that it followed until 2008. The parade became known
nationwide after being prominently featured in the 1947 film, Miracle on 34th Street, which included footage of the 1946
festivities. The event was first broadcast on network television in 1948 (see below). By this
point the event, and Macy's sponsorship of it, were sufficiently well-known to
give rise to the colloquialism "Macy's Day Parade". Since 1984, the
balloons have been made by Raven Aerostar (a
division of Sioux Falls, South Dakota-based Raven Industries).
November 24, 1978
David Letterman makes his first guest appearance on The Tonight Show.
November 24, 1983
Sesame Street Episode 1839, now known to children and fans as "Farewell, Mr. Hooper" airs.
After consulting with numerous child psychologists, Norman Stiles,
the head writer for the show, prepared a script designed to deal with the issue
of death on Sesame Street. The cause of death was not discussed on the show,
nor is the process of growing old. Valeria Lovelace, director of research at
the show's production company, the Children's Television Workshop, said
"We were advised to take the direct approach... Children don't understand
words like 'passing away.'" The show took an honest and direct approach.
Show producer Fran
Kaufman said that the goal was to
avoid "sugar-frosting" the message.
That message, according to the producers, was
"[Mr. Hooper] died, he won't be coming back, and we are all going to miss
him...Another message of the segment was that children have to understand that
they will continue to be cared for."
In the episode, Big Bird
thinks that Mr. Hooper will return later, but is told about the irreversibility
of death. Although being reminded of already being told Mr. Hooper died, Big
Bird, like many kids, shows his initial inability to comprehend this concept.
But Big Bird's concern soon switches to his own needs. "He's gotta come
back," Big Bird exclaimed, "Who's going to take care of the store?
Who's gonna make me birdseed milkshakes and tell me stories?" The other
adults reassure him that everything will be okay and he will be taken care of.
Big Bird gets frustrated by these comments exclaiming "but it won't be the
same". Bob
addresses Big Bird's concern head-on saying "You're right, Big Bird. It'll
never be the same without him. But you know something? We can all be very happy
that we had a chance to be with him and to know him and to love him a lot, when
he was here."
The farewell episode aired November 24, 1983 (Thanksgiving Day). Loretta Long noted, in an interview on The Tavis Smiley Show,
"We were very careful to do it over the Thanksgiving holiday, where there
would be a lot of adults in the house to help the children."
The filming of the scene was very emotional for the
cast and crew, whom had worked closely with Will Lee for 14 years. Genuine
tears were present in almost all on set. "We barely got through that
show," said Bob McGrath in a 2006 interview. "Any emotions you saw were
real. We tried to do a pickup and we got about a minute into it and we all fell
apart emotionally. It crossed over not only from PBS, but all of the networks.
They all felt it was such an important show that they took the time to
highlight it."
Mr. Hooper's death received a lot of press and drew
many viewers. Reports stated that the episode was used to stimulate discussion
of death in many homes. Valeria Lovelace commented, "It was a relief to us
all that the segment worked as we hoped it would. It was really scary
beforehand; we didn't know for sure how it was going to turn out." The
episode was soon selected by the Daytime Emmys
as being one of the 10 most influential moments in daytime television.
Aside from receiving critical acclaim, the episode
garnered success with its target viewers. Loretta Long explained, "People
come up to us and say, 'Thank you. Now we can explain what happened to grandma,
what happened to grandpa.'"
The episode was later adapted
into the book, "I'll Miss You,
Mr. Hooper" by episode writer
Norman Stiles. The full, uncut version of this episode is available for viewing
as part of the collection at The
Museum of Television and Radio. The
scene with the adults explaining Mr. Hooper's death was released on the DVD Sesame
Street: 40 Years of Sunny Days,
while Sesame
Street Unpaved included a script
for the scene, and portions of this scene have appeared in Sesame
Street: 20 and Still Counting, Sesame Street's All-Star 25th Birthday: Stars and
Streets Forever, Sesame
Street Unpaved, A&E
Biography: Sesame Street, and The Street We
Live On.
“The best episode we ever did
was Mr. Hooper's death. Those were real tears. Will was the sweetest man”. -- Caroll Spinney
November 25, 1998
Flip Wilson died of liver cancer in Malibu, California, aged 64
November 26, 1938
Richard Caruthers “Rich” Little is born.
In 1966 and 1967, Little appeared in ABC-TV‘s Judy Carne sitcom Love on a Rooftop as the Willises’ eccentric neighbor, Stan
Parker. He appeared on That Girl in 1967 as a writer who impressed Marlo Thomas‘ character with his impersonations. He also made two
memorable appearances as accident-prone Brother Paul Leonardi on The Flying Nun in 1968; it marked one his few appearances as a
character actor rather than an impressionist.
Little was a frequent guest on variety and talk shows. With Johnny Carson he captured The Tonight Show host’s voice and many on-stage mannerisms (and
later played Carson in the HBO TV-movie The
Late Shift). One of his best
known impressions is of U.S. President Richard Nixon (reprising in 1991 the role of Nixon as ideal
sperm donor in Gina’s fantasies on the soap opera Santa
Barbara.) During the 1970s,
Little made many television appearances portraying Nixon. He was a regular
guest on The Dean Martin Celebrity Roasts in the 1970s and was also a semi-regular on the
Emmy-winning ABC-TV variety series The
Julie Andrews Hourin 1972–1973.
In response to his imitation of Jack Benny, the comedian sent Little an 18-carat gold money clip
containing this message: “With Bob Hope doing my walk and you doing my voice, I can be a star and do
nothing.” He was named “Comedy Star of the Year” by the American Guild of Variety Artists in 1974.
His best-known continuing TV series was The
Kopycats, hour-long segments of The
ABC Comedy Hour, first broadcast
in 1972. Taped in England, these comedy-variety shows consisted entirely of
celebrity impersonations, with the actors in full costume and makeup for every
sketch. The cast included Little, Frank Gorshin,Marilyn Michaels, George Kirby, British comedian Joe Baker, Fred Travalena, Charlie Callas and Peter Goodwright.
The Rich Little Show (1976) and The New You Asked for It (1981) were
attempts to present Little in his own person, away from his gallery of
characterizations. Little also appeared on a second season episode of The Muppet Show.
In 1981 Little appeared in a comedy LP called The
First Family Rides Again, which was the fourth and final ‘First Family’
comedy LPs originally created by Bob Booker and Earle Doud. Little starred
along with Melanie Chartoff, Micheal Richards, Shelly Black, Jenilee Harrison,
Earle Doud, and Vaughn Meader, making light of U.S. President Ronald Reagan‘s years in the White House.
Little has starred in various HBO specials
including the 1978 one-man show, Rich Little’s Christmas Carol. He has also appeared in several movies and released nine albums.
When David Niven proved too ill for his voice to be used in his
appearances in Trail
of the Pink Panther (1982)
and Curse
of the Pink Panther (1983),
Little provided the overdub. (Ironically, Little provided the voice for the
Pink Panther in two experimental 1965 cartoons, Sink Pink and Pink Ice, in Niven’s voice). He rendered similar assistance
for the 1991 TV special Christmas at the Movies by providing an uncredited dub for actor/dancer Gene Kelly who had lost his voice. As a native Canadian, he also lent his voice
to the narration of two specials which were the forerunners for the animated
series The Raccoons: The
Christmas Raccoons and The
Raccoons on Ice.
Little was the host for the 2007 White House Correspondents’ Association dinner. Although President George W. Bush was reported to have enjoyed Little’s
performance, it was panned by some reviewers for “his ancient jokes and
impressions of dead people (Johnny Carson, Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan).”
Little voices as a guest star in Futurama such as Futurama: Bender’s Game, playing his own celebrity head: “This is Rich Little, impersonating Howard Cosell.” Many times he plays a sports commentator.
The Hollywood Christmas Parade (formerly the Hollywood Santa Parade or Santa Claus Lane Parade) is an annual
parade that takes place on the Sunday after Thanksgiving in
the Hollywood community in Los Angeles, California, United
States. The parade follows a 3.5-mile route along Hollywood
Boulevard, then back
along Sunset
Boulevard and features
various celebrities among its participants.
The Parade was
suspended from 1942 to 1944 due to World War II, but reopened in 1945 with record
attendance.
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